Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1907-11-14, Page 3tiovember 14th 1907 41 Wouldn't Believe the Conserst vathie and i'd Vote iiiberarl As Usual." Yeers ago Vire Was in TOiento • A men Meted teria inflinobing dettetien iso the 14111?Ora1 party, lion, George Zrewn he regarded as a Man of the sreatest abilities and loftiest motives but or Sir John Macdonald lie en- lertained the strongest dislike: Next to his polities eente an alimost 'equally -..emeomprehensiVe .adVecaes eat- Prollibis • Von. - Al a temperance; meeting one night this gentleman was rnaleiag a speech and roundly condemning the traffie in intoxicants. Carried away by 1115 zeal he declared that a man; ehoutd sink his 'party politics in the, meral camPatge fo a sobee populace, "Yoe . all know that I am a strain Liheral," lie declared, "but I say to you. here and now that in an eilection where the Liberal candidate *Quid not pledge himself to support Prohibition, perand where the Conservative candidate would do so. I would vote for, the . • 1 .4 •Conservative Candidate." A report of the speech was in the papers next morning, and a friend meeting the speaker in Yong e street rallied "him about it. A* "Did you really say it?' "1 did.". "Put do you niekm to say that yoh -father -of us all,: the -man we haVe alWaYS'lbolted to f or, tight and leading, the man who is true ev- en when all others _are failee to the principles of • Liberalism -that y,ou would ,aetually go the length of vot- ing ler the ConserVative candidate ?" The other Patina to think. ' "I'll tellyou hew it would be," lie said. "When it eame to the pinch, if the Liberal wouldn't prOrnise and 'the Conservative would promise to sup- port Prohibition, why, I. wouldn't be- lieve the Conservative and I'd vote Teiberal usual." -Saturday- Night, vomorpoNaNTIM...., am.i.ammosomme‘s The Old Settler Was:Far Prouder of His - First Log licitise Than He Ever Was :of the Much More Expensive One WL bleb Succeeded .It. .. . " . A Motherwell correspondent . writes • ment was -equal to. that of a baseball entertainingly of the logging- bees • tournament. The work was very',often, long ago and also of disappearing old finished quite early in the day audethe I log buildings. His remarks are in a remainder was site -art iii. Raying • bait, . . pleasant vein and slhould vividly recall pitching quoits, Jumping; running,. old scums to .our lingering and. vencra- • vaulting tire pole, . etc': Athletics, vera The News -Record will be sent to any teed pioneers. They should also serve just as inah indulged in then as now., address until the end of 1903 for only to impress the younger generation and a cofnmen . thing for . an active. , $1.25,- - ' - , . with some idea of what pioneering young man to ' do • was. to put his. ' Clinton Novcs+R000rtl The plan, often, relieattal by, John Campbell, that veteran sheep breeder. of Victoria County, JO along the right lbws. Take care of the Blimp by build .ing a, little eactesure, cheaply made of wire, wherein the4heep can be puVat night. These, enclosures can be Made dog proof, and they can Ise so placed on hills and on poor spots: 'Of the field as to make the land rieher at the same time. The labor of attending to this is slight, and after it is drone for a few ,tiraes the Sheep cattle in at night of their own accord. There is more money in sheet) than in many other branches of farming. II our antlers' institutes and granges would discuss this question more, and the raising .of sheep better uncleastood,_ farmers of Ontario Would be a long eway better off.-eToronte World„ • tes, The Weekly Mail and Empire and The News -Record Will be sent to any address until the end of 1908 for only The People's Mine. The 'O'Brien Syndicate, which through favoritAsm with the late .Ontario Government Were allowed to blanket ,some of the best claims around Cobalt, are making money, but they are not getting it all, The new Government attacked their claim to the property and they were glad to agree to a eonipromise by Which they pay hack to the people:of Ontario who owned it 25 per cenu. on all ore mined, less' the charges foe handling it. Since December last they have paid 8222,945 into 'the Ontario treas- ury. • Ross gave the whole thing to O'Brien, Whitney made O'Brien fork over 25 per cent. of it to the people, And it wits on behalf of the 0.'Briens" et al that- ex -leader Grahein used to , prate about the incontestability Of 'titles The Weeklk Mail and Emnire and 'meant. These old-time pen pictures are among .the most welcome contri- butions to any newspaper's columns. After getting the first acre. or two, bands Ore p. six -reit fence and vault is .witheet touching it. with tis twee - h The logging bee eften ended .up with chopped and a shanty up, the pioneer'S a dence•in.the evening, and the .merry • i • work was' to clear his lot, chop as strains Of- the fiddle drove: dull care That. Will..Prove sjuriout trimly acres as he could in winterearal) away. Bees were 'very helpful in many get it logged in summer. To get a I ways. jf a 'mail wet.. no getting on . to iticCOUlttry.• good "burn" was a great help. A I very well-eno matter what the scat's:3,e .• ' ' • • • " • • Those who 'Levi.: irequently teavelled . good burn meant to • have . all the was -sickness in the. family,. the loss 'over a, stretch of .railWay in old ont- arie-:,ay- betAveen• Toronto and; Strat• ford -during• the last qbarterof a eerie tUry *will . have el.:served a steasly dim- inution in, the* volume ,of waterflow- ing. in streams eroSsed by the line o; railway. Where a '1 e' innelted '; years age great Titers ran, small and ever dwindling stteanis.' dibble along .•s,hal-• low., beds.- In ":25. yeats. the ehange.hae been' Marked, and thase who advocate the -preservation of abet foiests. tell eS, thatthe .deers•ase irieraoistere; of which seVe. haSe visible evidence, :Must :in tine' work .this 'fine country Sere iouS injury; unless steps be taken.. to arrest the process.. • The Passing of ete. fores t CauSes 44oss of Moisture brush, rotten wood and leaves c • sume,d in the bush burning which was always undertaken wh.en a strong mind was blowing -away f rom the of an .oxe,• or Perhaps the • only -• cow they had -the neighbors teirned. 'out, and gave them a 'lift. It' was. the .on- ly way they had of praying for a man. -shanty. One Man with a yoke ,of ox- in those old-fiNtioned tirries: .1 May en could .do some logging, hut, it was tell later on about hUsiting bees7Par- • a slow process and changing work ing bees --and quilting bees. .But - t with neighbors was the plan generally Meet proceed • totals° a log barn, ,even adopted. All felt the necessity of if the neighbers may not be all tare -helping each other, and we think, I with the matigolds and. turnips . '. awl that "nran to man"' was much nearer! the raising. . met; ...: mean 'ra call • for. . • . . . . • to tieing ,e'brithers" then than they ; hands. • . • • • ... . , • . ,. . e, are now. Five men arid a yoke el ox -1 The old iog;beens. ere: not all gciee en were a logging party. Tb do a yet. Oce.esioeally.. you -will,fied, a good day's .work good oxen and team- little log building, Well plasterd. and. -ster were a prime necessity. kept; and .used foehens-but they were To be a good manager Of. oxen was ncit built in, the earl y days. a gift. We have seen the dieser adiust.' We are tail& •by the,pioneeri that, the 'yoke on the neck of • the off ox, I notwithatanding. the • hard watkae of then hold up the other end Of the ; elearing and .huildinge-these. were' the yoke with his left hend, and the bow i happiest. days •-of- their' lives.; , Saeh in his right, signal and command the, year adding.. a few acres . to the clear - ox to come .under -and he came. This I jag, raising more . crop, putting sip • an _ might seem quite easy, but when. erou . addition or "lean-to' • to the building, sr consider that the . driiver _heel. Ids fore" and in most instanceS, a laegea small noon's chew of tobacco and the -lioaVIe aMtly-growitigettp. around theta. aave 9 en • ea , , . : b • rd. thorn set", . "We have key in .his mouth„. the performance,. h ft looks more formidable. ' . • ' coining -Me" One ....old. -Settlee An expert' driver was an advanta.ge • told us that -he' Was, far..prouder of ills even to the team ; one who knewfirst log house, than,, he eyer..wase. 'O.. Stroh • forests' as remainare peeched, the over -the -under ' and the rolling the tostly stone ' .hpuse. Which. e.e110- , and dty, and easily' fell a prey to the hitches and could take everyadvane sasses, 'H it. . . , . ... a . s .... . . fires. • ow to . restorem „. ferer condie tag° of the "lay" of the ground in ; - • • • • The settlerl,s .second • battle in ran . tione, peen, 111 • part, was a " question .drawing his lugs and planning his pilaf elearing was with ,the Stunins. He eonsidetedeby Dr. Cox, or,ae he ex - Rivets and links were kept ,oir hand i could °admire. a tree but there. was w no, praseed it, • how to.: arrest and Vold to mend broken chains and in an ern - 1 beetit in a strinep. The oak -and thetteten the diminished . water supply of. Before e natural hittory soeiety in New Brunsakiek Dr.' :Philip Cox re- cently read a paper. that is both cure tour and inteeesting. He spoke of the great feests that once graced: that province, and the way they had beer cleaned. sip; with the consequeeces that, inetead of •the,. fbre'st•'bed retain-. ing meisture the -year round and -pay- ing it off gradually to the Streams and .valleys; it now rushee, re o %in the Spying and reaches the .oceale • ergency a "togle' was used. A togle • was made by pushing one link through • cherry were the most stubborn. It another and, inserting a piece of wood did not do-- to:apple. fire too soon ....rib- : the .stumps- ; -t•t nad to.leach • a to keep it there. Neeessity.was the hey mot her -and mother -in -law -of inveria certain stage :of dec,ay ..te 'get •a good tion. • burn: The entailer •ones . were pulle& After the logging came the burning n1,, piled against the -large ones. A -of the log heaps and the saving .of the ."°'" 61 stumps. burning ' at .night ,was ashes -which were valuable -and wete a v,*.,beautifirasight ; "like a- thous - kept dry if possible till they were- put in the "leaches," made into lye, then into potash, which was' about • the -only thing that money could be had • for in the earlier days. A barrel • Of potash, A No. 1 was worth about, $40. Not very, many now • remember the raking of the ashes, drawing them it a cart to the leaches, and then runn- ing off the leaches and boiling the lye But the of a foo, an over - in the potash kettle till it reached- headelinthe._ in the glancing of araaxee the potash stage, and the "melting"' laid .un Mae for weeks; • •and of it which very much resembled the caused bim m to carry tbe arks of the '"sugaring off" of the maple syrup. I axe for the fest of .. • es In later days \alien men and oxen 1 We havo en tislred-howe•did the "became more plentiful, logging bees: people drese. 'in • '...thoseetlake 'They -were common, The fallow to be leg- dressed well and•Avaimly... Sheep were ed was staked off into '"throughs" first introdueed, and at first the: wool -of acre each, whith ttere selected was carded by hand cards, spun with by lot or the "drawing •cf cute," as the STA:roans; Wheel, and woven by the it was then called. All the teams hand looms. Many of our planters rm with their coilement of rollers star-. were old country weavers. 'The elO'Ile . ted at the ,same time and it was .a was fullee by hand, and dyed by • the •*, rare from the word go --which. woula juice" of buttanut bark, and the home go tbrough firlt. When seven ox eight made flannel Made excellent shirtsafor teams were set at work the- excite, tho men,. and dresses for. tbe. women. - • . We Must Have Sheep, Because 'Mau Pau ; We Will Alvvaus Have Dpgs. the .preseete where it e de, most -geed. .a subject ° of the .first im- portance to all the: older proVinces Canada,. for our fathers ' slow° trees. with a. westefulriessethat our. • genet; children will have •• • cause to regret,: unless we, do :aimething to -repair tbe dareage.' 'Does fife careful study. ' Of• and earna • ewes burning'!and ;was., 'primitive pouch tions,' ' aakse:Dr. Cox, with pa:nig:tette pride' the termer , of I reveal the •preeence and operation. of those days told you that he had forty I any special Aileen's „to' the. end," ••• of acres "clear of • •stunitis,'' and could holding natural -moisture where it plough a straight furrow from. end to will dii the most good. "ExPlore," end. . he • says, "the valley ei some brook •When we think of the danger attend-, and note the little. meadoWs' that cc- ing chopping, - legging- and building, -cut one after the, .other, sometenes.:: •• there were not many fatal accidentea °or *seven • in halt a". mil. These-tv6re bnit by the .heavers and formed a . natural reservoir 10. etere: eethe. 'Water- neettalitryeliteeerte • the .inote.• tuee of that region., .. • Narcisse, ,,Contine of St; Joseph Sags He Has Spent $000,000 (?) On the "Cittr and That It Has a Population of 300,(?) A. recent issue of the 1Viontreal Star containi a eeport of an intereeting in- terview with Mr. N. Cantin, of St. Joseph, Ont., as follows "1 decided that a -town -of French- Canadians on Lake Huron would be a wag thing end n'profitableetleing, se .1 went to work and built it." This is nnusual Statement to bear a. man'make in a quiet toneof voice, as if the building of a town were a little matter that ha was ,in the habit of doing any day in the week, put a glance at ;the mart ould' be euough to conisince even the most doubting of Thomases; ; Many farmers raise the objection to the raising of sheep that. the dog nuisance is too great. One man in. Ontario county says that his Xs* of 18 lambs has dwindled to two, 34 he is going to qui?. No doubt there is a big loss annual: ly to the 'farmers thruethe dog nuis- ance. The al tacks are generally made at night, when it is impossible to see the intruders. Many vigilant. .Lt,r7 mere have used the rifle to advantage, but it !s tiresome work and nee:II:se worry. Nova Scotia is hiving 80r - bus thoughte over he nine ceiest.ion. Doe taxes have ;:e.n hate.' by....many township's, yet !till tlur imiamee este.. tinere. „ The fact is, . man likes a dog. Cer- tainly they are friends of man and the *plug of theta -will continue, sheep or no sheen, • It tt needl.ss for anyone to expeet legielation to unnee- resarilk oppress the owners ef dogse They have a right to a bearing 'oeul the. tax . that arevents useless ours. frren bejoiritng • too tomtit= answers, all purposes. ' • How, then, shall we raise sheep ? The .q0ealion.niust be looked nt in the most seesible, way. .As in the produc- tion of everything in agriculture, there lo drawbeck, and the suiaival of itulthe y depeauls upon the stet( cen oi battle aeatiret the evil. We nuea haet sheep, .because tney pay. We will :•1. • ways have dogs.. Therefore, we. inurn. (eat of sir Maw. • , . • „Seztforth. • Mr. and Mrs,. II.. Ferguson, of Van,- eottver, who have been • visiting with -alr.• and 'Mrs. D. Moore. of Egmcaul- ville eft hist week for their home en j.he Pacific. toast. While. here Mr. anti Mre .Fergeson reneWed acquaintances W4. friends they haenot seen tliifty yews, and, needless to Say; they greatly enjoyed their vi*t. Mrs.McKay; Tcloclevichilitet, re- turned yes'ierdity 'from a pleasant. •'Vis At with hey , Son, Mr, W. 0. McVay, barrister of Toronto. • • He is a big man. is Narcisse Cantin, the founder dud sole owner of St. Jos- eph, and he has a Armful way about th him at shows the energy and enter- prise of the doer of 'things. He dropp- ed into the Star Office on Ids way home te his tovvn on theeetalre, and 'chatted interestingly aboat what he had already accomplished there and aboute what he intemis to do its the i future. the first place,'" ha said, "I want to contradict some :reports that have been spread to the effect that St. Joseph is to be sold by, auetion, There is no foundattoneto such rum- ors, whose only effect is to injure 'me , with the People I am doing baSitiese with. St. Joseph is not sold and I won't' be sold ;in that Way, It is true that several time e Sheriff's net-. ices of a sale have been given out, but I have always managed to find money to meet my engagements before a sae could be held. Yon can understand that it is no easy thing to build A town," said Mr, Caritin With a elude "There is lots of money needed and I have already --sperit-8601).00-in, the Work." He went on to state that St, Jos- eph which is situated a little over twenty miles from the town of God-, erieh, Ont., on the shore of the deep - n .est ciretlat bay othe lake, now con- tains some three hundred inhabitanth. The Government- is now putting in a wharf, and • Mr. Cantin hopes to have a railway completed in-• the course 'of the next few.years. "I have -already a considerable pore tion of my right of way purchased and the surveys and 'plans'. are all made. The road.4is to run from Stratford to St. Joseph, "In the town itself I have built my own waterworks.nnd my own electric light print, I have a big hot- el in the course of construction and a number of stores up. _They will be ready for the incoming busineee when I bave completed my road • an& my connection with the other. towns of the province," , Mr, Cantin started his preient work -aom.e ten 'Years ago, but the lapse ef time does :not seeru to have dimmed his 'expectations and he is more hope- ful than ever to bringing to a 'sue- tessful, issue his plans for a French- Canadian city on the shores of Lake Huron. . , -- The Failure of the Railways to Handle Freight Causes „Mier Mer- chants and Manufacturers De., lag and Loss of Business. m. 1 The .tollowing frothe • - Montreal there is . a state qf . congestion, cars Witnees 041e with a. 'state of affairs "are hard to get for the transhipment tif.. which exists on loth the Grand Trent: goods from the interior and when and .the Canadian Paciac railways and Which is trying the patience of ata business people and causing themi loss. of ttaele :• • ' 1. . The usual somplaints • ate '04,q1e,- made againtt the railways; and this time with some a.ppearaece of justificatien: `No relief,' complained a,; emechant this moyning ; 'eongestion as great as ever, and •the vvinter quite, a way off Yet. Wily. should mcienaets; 'woeking hard ageinst great olds all the time, be so nandieapped,',,wieg ' o 'titi e goods not geetieg the eleisateli , wieli is neoeSsary fqt the proper carraihg on ef their business. Il I Tan my :bueita. ess: as some of . the railways run theire ,I ivotild soon have no busiri-ss to• run."' • • . i . 'Another merchant said.tiliat 11 he 6 Offer- ed to pay tmare, cost af . t loco- motive -in 'addition' to the crdinary .fretglit arrives in Montreal. it , seem beyond the power of at least.one of the; hig railway coippanies here •to pities, the. ears in Such a position that merchants Can, get delivery, of, the con- tents, which are wanted 'so badly.. The troubles and'delays and consequent loseee which merchant esperieneed last' winter in the etrensit and deli- very of their, goods, whicb was attra:" huted by the' railwak, cornpenies t,o the immense crops, -which they had not the °foresight. to. prepare for, has torne mencedeltitea.dy, and while cars are herdtoget in the Iitteeler,ethe ter- minal• here is bloeked with loaded cese vvhieh cannot he unloaded as.they are not placed.' Surely after all we have heard of incteased increa-sed rolling stock, -increased • everything, we are not going to, be called upon to g� through the trials, the worries, and .freight -if the . railway .company would the losses of last winter over again. • only send it, .and Ws hurry his We Want no mote' trivial • excuiCs goods feetvards, All this at a time abeuf Merchants" delaying . delivery, When the. railways • have none ol the • Which might haye been the case . re - natural elements to. eemtend ageinst, garding a few cars of box good's,- but • Complaint. from the merchants' are the large .teceivers' those who supply general, '.atid it isasserted that 'an, the great bulk "at freight to the Ems other -factor ,has ',arrived on the scene: .way eormianies, Were diapering- • last Merchants are refusing -to pay theie winter. 'gently 'a but . Will clamor. 'this drifts at the banks until their goods winter more loudly if :the. rhismanege- are -actually placed for defivery, so meet and bungling _Which"- tegulted. it the ha.nleers- aee novi chiming in with such serious loses the:, past winter a Very :airtheritative vOice in the mat- are .to be repeated this -coming •wine ter. They. Want ari explanation of tbi. Competition is to great and Why there should be seal delay, and' profits are too s•rnall to :submit quiet.-. the merchants- are aeking in thorn& of ly to impositions of this kind: by the the • General • Managers.: "Why are railway companies who receive' their 'things so t" • goods for transit . and delay them,' a' month, say, between Toronto and •here,:these same shippers having to The inerchaitts are 'Voicing theirl Watt perhaps fOr some ttiaie previonse .grumblingeie a every audible manner ly for empty ears on Which' to 10,Ad. If those reeponsible are not. able to remedy this 'e•vil ,let them step down and "out and let others, take -their plaeee to 'the benefit of the 7 railway and the. genera public." -Montreal ' • . dt .the ivlway companies owing to the great delay in the transit ortheir goods. Long before the •snovv, com-• mences to block the tracks or the cold weather freeze up the engines, said ono interested gentleman testae:, Witness. ' ' ' • , • • • • Though There Are ,a Great Mang a —More Settlersi-the -Cross 'Re- turns From the Wettern CrOp Will Fail- Short of Last Year. Mie. W. Hay, of • the Bank- of Conl- inerce Atari", has been transferred' to WI:tripes and left for the wet yestet- day. . • Memorial services were held in the First Presbyterian Church Sunday in memory , of the bate- Rev, Matthew Barr, °' • If lir, It W. Brown, representative of the Sabbath S'ehool • Aesociat ion, ar- rived here' Sunday. night and 'remained until Tuetelay, The Weekly Mail SUld "nmoire end The News -Record will be sent to any address 'until the t•ntf 11)08 for only ° • . . ...Wentworth ,I.alAals nom :lie tett Mr. W. ft. Sealerfor Cern:nom:. tie. Jebel Robinson; er!f-M. P.,- died ai• beeir 'A reliable correspondent of the. Sun whose opportunities for gaining first- hand:, information • are exceptionally good, states: that the Western Prov- -ince te will nottee-this-eyear have over 20,.00.0,000 buehels of good' .milling wheat, and that the entireecrep,. in- -eluding chicken feed, -Will net. go be- yond 65,000,000 buShels. The state- ment made by this*correspondent , corroborated by well-informed •grain dealers consulted 43y the Sun. They ssei that unthreshed heads, whieli pre- sent a ..fine appearance, in many eases shell out nothing hut a few shrivelled' kernels. of grain. The deceptive ap- pearanee in the heads in .• whale • letts led some eulhorities miscalculate the yield. Admitting the vere of 05,000,- d 000 bushels to ..be. co. recto it. means a decline of one-third in total yield as serripated 'with last year. "With AO& a large propbrtion of infericir 'wheat and irt View of the doWnward tendency an the 'market, it is dOubtful if the average price per bushel received fot this yea's cron will very greatly ex- ceed the average recetved for the:Oral) of 1909, a large pritt• of which, it must be ,remembered, wee not, be - 'cause tof the 'railway, blockade, 'sold until this year. Certain it is that, with more people to share ih the die th'e gross returns from the "Westerii harvest this seaeon will fal far short of those. obtainedlast, This would he a suffiebently Wiens matter under any eirturnstanees ; it is doub- ly serious in view of the fact that OM- CUlatiorils were based on a bumper'eron as a means of meeting losses it 'land speculation and other acCumulated lia- • bilities. ' 1.1..1...••••••••••••••••Wd....... The gas pressure at Port Bowen is weak and it is claimed that the supply is not 'fit for illuminating purpos • . Bruco county council has appointed G. ,T, Goetz ae stoiograPhereffir, . the local courts at the salary ot $100, A feature el the Beverley plowing match was the' splendid work of a 'young 14Inglishman who ns.wr, held a plow in Canada before'this eLt • The 1VIedie'ine lotat Council. has "decid- ed to mortgage the waterworks and gas plants in preference to selling de- bentures at this time- of tight money, • • • A 4441:-.-Inan Was drawn, Ma a ma- , . ehi„e• iii et Bait/fiord faAor, and bad his clothing stripped oft coranietely. lie eseived etitii a few bruises: jtfr Woos from Rheumatism 'Whets Rheumatism grips yon --when you can't walls witbout cintehes-..when every movement ttUlitte agpny- Talie Gin Pills They Curet. Rheuniationt • It la wonderful -the way Gin Pills take away the pain -strengthen and heal the kidneys-, and cute Rheumatism, Sciatica'and Lumbago to stay cured. Try Gin rills on our guarantee that they cure or money back, soc. it box -6 for $2.50. ,A.t druggists or by !nail. Oe lia0LE DFICO CO. WINNIPC43, MAN. '71rir IL ' ypiak. sOtta; -Milk Ali A11011' ,t.e, .r. � IT IS a very simple operation to bake on , Af I the SOUVENIR RANGE. •,‘ AThe aerated principle of the SOUVENIR z NI a provides a constant flow. of pure air eated to the. 11, ir temperature of the oven before it e te it. 4This ensures a baking of bread or„oake from "fal . If bread, cakes or pies are to be light and whole- some, they must be surrounded by pure air while baking. In no range is this supplied so scientifically as in the SOUVENIR. The aerated oven of the.SOUVENIR.placei it away ahead'of all other kitchen ranges. . . %Every souvenir is absolutely ituutetriteed by the •makers. . THE GURNEY-TILDEN COMPANY flamilton Montreal 4r I Winnipeg 'Vancouver Davis, & Rowland Clinton You want to learn bookkeeping so • You will know the, co.rr,eet way to - that when you finish your course enter up every coriceivable kind of you will feel sure of yourself, don't a .transaction by: either single or , you? , double entry:, e • • That's the way we will teach yeti You will . kaw every Phase of .bootkhkeeeping. ' modern banking Methods, lve, . will theory tho roofu gblioloykki rieeetpriuncgt and. niessNsvililif:maZdre ;11 akentois,avl in then make you apply, your tht eore- , vovteir ;err ,dnuo4ttesstry the demand. for itel knowledge in a practical way.. . Large, illustrated catalegrie, free. FOREST CITY BUSINESS COLLVE . J. W. WESTERVELT.' Members of Business Educators' Association. ' • ' Principal, Loriaon. 119111MOSIIIIMMIIMINIMIORAtiraMOMMINIiM This Gornpany is chartered by law, to accept the management of - the estate of a periondyirig with- , out a will: •Itisa Carefully:managed., Anent; erally-responsible CoMpany, with. years of 'experience in such matters. • ' .• _ If appeinted to act as adridnis- teeter it will assume the manage- ment of the estate, collect and pay debts, distribute legacies and pro.' perty among the heirs. -. • It will prove an honeit, able • , administrator of he estate. Beery interested person will be alloted • his or her lawful share. ' • The charge's,. in every case.fixed, • by a judge, will be no greater, more likely less, than the re- niunerition alloweil•the individual eadministrator.. • • , • 4, • Services of Family Solicitor always yetained .by 'Company.' • Corresporidence ' invited and answered promptly. s. \ .‘e\ ** L019:10N, CANADA.:. ' eSoW.thistles • are growing ct nuieeece, lel the southern part 'Qt.:Ontario Coun- ty, ana'are denOtinee.d.as WOrse ' pest tan muStard.. • .' Walkerton livery/lien °point.. nut that . it. costs exactly twice n. 104. teed horses as formerty. yet Pa are , . , •, • • • . just the same,. .• . a • , • The 'latest •iepoets , from . Karateigh state that 3,400 persons petiehed in the landslide there no October . •amemarman;wkadaeoj • Port Rowan bay is sWerming with duckei hut, ,the Sinicoe Refbrmer adds', , "they are Wary enough: to make Shoat.: •ing a fine art.. • ' a A Waterford family, of nine aggtee ge,tes a weight of 2;300 pounds:tato of tho eisters 300," arid elle grand- father weighs 410. • • 'The battleship Superb, the Smith � DIP' Dreadnought type was launched on 12. * the Tyne keeterdaye • • Most peoble know that if they have been 'sick they need Sot'r, Emul- 41012 to bring back health and strength. But the strongest point about Scoit's Emulators is that you don't have to be sick to get results from it. It keeps up the athlete's strength, puts fat *on thin people, makes a fretful baby happy, firings color to a pale, girrs cheeks, and pre- vents coughs, colds and consumption. Food in concentrated form for ick and well, young -and old, rich and poor. , And it ce,atAins no drugs and no alcohol,. ALL pbtltIOCIISTe; sco, AND 83i.00: osoloanzeionoos:4414:3444441.4.44454444